By Nancy Friedman, Customer Service Expert, Keynote Speaker, President of Telephone Doctor Customer Service Training.
The holidays are fast approaching. Few times are more important for your customer service. The holidays can not only make your financial year a huge success, but it’s also a prime opportunity to gain new customers who will return year-round.
However, if employees fail at customer service and are not helpful, knowledgeable, or unpleasant, you not only lose customers and lose future sales, but you also risk the chance of getting slammed on social media.
So what can owners and managers do to encourage excellent customer service during the beyond the holiday season? Here are five tips that will help up your game and provide customer service that will generate holiday sales and repeat customers in the new year.
* Start some sort of training now, before the holiday shoppers arrive. If you have some customer service training in place, review with your employees and those seasonal workers you are hiring for the holidays. If you don’t have a customer service plan in place, hire an experienced expert to spend a day training your staff. And if you have no time to train, remind your employees that “thank you for shopping with us”; or “we appreciate your business” or “Have a wonderful holiday” go a long way, costs nothing and leaves a positive lasting impression.
* Meet with your staff at the end of each day. Discuss went wrong and what went right? Make sure any customer service concerns are addressed immediately and solutions are made so customers walk away satisfied.
* Prepare your employees with a “mental” suit of armor. Make sure they’re aware all customers won’t be so nice, and some will be difficult. Your employees will be on the front lines of occasional customer abuse. Warn them in advance, and make sure that when those incidents happen that your employees will still treat the customer with politeness and respect. We all know the customer isn’t always right. But they remain the customer.
* Your employees need to care. While knowledge of a product is important, it’s just as vital that your sales people show they care, and want to help the customer with a purchase. A friend of mine want into a restaurant only to find the hostess busy texting. She was more concerned with her phone than properly greeting the diner. Not good! Greet each customer as if they were bringing a million dollars of business to your store.
* The most important customer service win: smile! Don’t let your employees greet customers without a smile. A smile leaves a positive, friendly first impression.
So as the holidays quickly approach, in addition to hiring seasonal workers and hoping for big sales, also remember that if you don’t provide excellent customer service and leave a pleasant experience with your shopper you’ll lose an opportunity to gain and retain valued customers forever.